Amanda's November Books!

Happy Halloween, everyone! I hope you're all having a good/scary time and haven't eaten too many Kit-Kat bars as I have. The town where I live had their trick-or-treat last night, so my festivities are now over and I'm onto thinking about the next holiday (Christmas!) and the rush of new releases coming up in the next two months. Where has the year gone???

But thinking about Christmas is perfect for my first November release! (Since I have 2 releases in November and my new Laurel McKee book, Duchess of Sin, in December, I am spending the next few weeks visiting blogs and running around to bookstores in addition to wrapping presents and mailing cards...) Snowbound and Seduced is my new Christmas novella in Regency Christmas Proposals

"Mary Bassington, Lady Derrington longs to be the carefree woman she once was. But she gets more than she bargained for this Christmas when she's snowbound with old flame Dominick, Viscount Amesby, who reignites her passion for life--and love!" (from the back cover)

I had so much fun working on the Diamonds of Welbourne Manor anthology with Diane and our friend Deb Marlowe that I loved getting to re-visit the characters for this story. I had never really intended for Mary Bassington to have her own tale, but after I met her I became very curious. Why was she so sad? What was going on between her and Dominick? Snowbound and Seduced was my chance to find out and give them their very own holiday HEA (and also catch up with some of the Welbourne crowd!).

I also love snowbound stories, am totally addicted to them, so it was easy to devise a plot for Mary and Dominick that would get them together again and make them talk to each other finally (among other activities...). They have to join forces to set out in nasty winter weather in order to track down her naughty younger sister--who has eloped with Dominick's cousin! On the way they find out the truth about the past, and discover that their love has never died. And they have a lovely, holly-berry Christmas too! (Regency Christmas Proposals also includes stories by Carole Mortimer and Gayle Wilson, so it's a great holiday treat! It's available at Eharlequin, and you can find excerpts and more info at my website)

"A heart-warming tale of unrequited young love that comes back to haunt and stoke flames of passion!" --The Season Reviews

My second November release, a Harlequin Historical Undone story with the all-encompassing title To Court, Capture, and Conquer, has nothing at all to do with Christmas, but it's also a "cabin" romance! Set in Elizabethan England, Lord Edward Hartley is finally poised to take his long-planned revenge on Sir Thomas Shelton, a villain who once destroyed Edward's brother. Edward will kidnap Shelton's virginal intended. But he gets the girl's beautiful, sophisticated aunt, Lady Elizabeth, instead! (It's available at Eharlequin now as well!)

Trapped together in a country cottage, they find a passion neither of them ever expected--and a way to heal the wounds of the past. I loved seeing Edward and Elizabeth find happiness together, and I loved the setting too, the seamier side of the 16th century. Look for these characters to continue in a full-length novel next year, release date TBA...



You haven't seen the last of me this year, either! I will be at various blogs in coming weeks (Word Wenches on November 24 to promote Duchess of Sin, followed by The Season on the 30th, Borders on December 15, and SOS on December 6, along with Nicola Cornick. Lots of chances to win! I also have a great contest going on at my Laurel site until December...)

What are some of your favorite holiday stories?? (I like to get out all my old Regency Christmas anthologies, which I used to buy every year, and re-read them around Christmastime!). What are some of your favorite holiday traditions? And do you enjoy the shorter-length stories? (I will give away a free download of To Court... and a signed copy of Regency Christmas Proposals to two commenters)

Scary!


. . . And I'm not talking Halloween (which, by the way, I have not one, but TWO costumes for; on Saturday, I'm heading to a party with my pal Liz Maverick, and will be dressed as Bea Arthur's Maude, which only takes me making my hair gray somehow, since I already have the loud '70s clothing. Then on Sunday, my son is a samurai, so I'm borrowing a Japanese geisha type top from Liz and will be making myself even whiter than usual in a vague attempt to match him).


No. I am admitting that, for the first time, I've signed on to participate in NaNoWriMo, the month-long write 50K words in 30 days event. Why? Why would I do such a thing? Peer pressure. And not even pressure; my friend Kwana said she was gonna, and why didn't I? Not really pressure so much as a simple question.

So I joined up. And am hoping not to disgrace myself and fail utterly at the task. I already know I won't write fifty thousand words, but I am hoping the competition will get me to the keyboard rather than waving my hand and saying, 'why bother?'

I am competitive, in an odd way, and if I know other people are suffering with their word counts it'll make me feel better (very sschadenfreude-y of me, but I admit my faults).

Plus a newly-made friend (at RWA, but she lives here in Park Slope) told me there are NaNoWriMo write-ins in my neighborhood, so maybe I can go hang out with other sufferers at some point. Whee!

Are you good with deadlines? Do you like the pressure? Do you hate them? How do you force yourself to get things done on time?

Megan

What makes a good booksigning?

I'm doing a few booksignings over the next few weekends and I wanted to ask you what makes a good booksigning, from both sides of the table.
I signed recently at the New Jersey RWA Literacy Bookfair which was a lot of fun. I sat next to Colleen Gleason, one of the authors for Bespelling Jane Austen. We had chocolate. We had bookmarks, magnets, coverflats and big grins on our faces. We had great tottering piles of books and signs with our names on them that tended to fall over.

I'm happy to report that the piles of books did become slightly smaller as time went on and I had time to wander around, admire others' covers, and even buy a couple of books myself.

So what makes a good signing? First, you have to sell books. Second, you need to know where the bathroom is because, particularly in bookstores, people always ask. You must have things around other than the books, because even if people throw out the bookmarks as soon as they get home, the subliminal message of buy my books for all your friends, pay off my daughter's college loans, and vote Democrat has imprinted on their brains. In another post I'll tell you how to design the subliminal message.

I like to do group signings because if a customer approaches you can ask them what they like to read and engage them in conversation, which is the best possible thing you can do. If they don't read books like yours, you can refer them to the other writers at the table, and they may buy yours anyway. I find I do better at engaging a customer by standing up, smiling, and offering chocolate. I've even walked around the bookstore and chatted to people who are browsing and invited them to the table. For me the worst possible scenario is the single lonely writer sitting behind a pile of books and occasionally directing someone to the bathroom.

If I go to a signing I like to feel that I have shared a few seconds or moments exclusively with the writer(s) and that I'm not part of some sort of signing conveyor belt.

I'm signing this Saturday at Borders, Bowie MD, from 2:00--4:00 pm at a Halloween signing. I shall wear special earrings. My partners in crime are Rebecca York, Pamela Palmer, and Catherine Asaro. Members of my local RWA® chapter will appear as costumed minions to herd people over to the table and the store staff will also dress up.

Also the multitalented Catherine Asaro will perform songs from the companion CD to her latest release Diamond Star.

I hope if you're in the area you'll drop by. It should be a lot of fun.

What have been your good booksigning experiences? Your worst?

A Contrarian Voice

On Monday, Diana put up a great post about piracy with link to a site for commenting on Senate Bill 3804, The Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeits Act. Here is a link to the text of the bill.

Although I agree there are good reasons behind the bill, I don't necessarily agree with THIS bill or even with the intent behind it. I also don't think the bill, should it pass, will be effective.

The effects of book piracy are NOT well understood. The only rigorous study on the subject to date concluded that piracy INCREASES book sales except for the very best selling authors-- which is not most of us.

EDITED TO ADD: I know that one of the commenters to Diana's post referred obliquely to this claim so let me clarify. The study was done by Brian O'Leary of Magellan Research. When I found out his study was $99.00 I emailed him and told him I was sorry I couldn't afford his study but suggested he contact RWA to talk about getting even better data. He told me he was already in contact with them. Mr. O'Leary was kind enough to send me his study, which I have personally read. The study was based on actual sales numbers as opposed to the made up estimates typically bandied about. Within the parameters of his study, the numbers showed that, indeed, piracy helps the midlist author.

I've posted at length at my blog about this (you can go here to read it, but I warn you, it's a long post. Right now, my position is that authors should demand good solid studies before they spend even five minutes chasing down pirates on their own. Setting aside the ethics of piracy, to date, the good data (by which I mean not the inflated trumped up numbers and conclusions pulled from the ether by companies selling their anti-piracy solution) does not support the conclusion that piracy hurts books sales.

In the very near future I hope to have my opinion changed and informed by rigorous studies by third parties with no financial interest in the results and conclusions.

Book piracy, by the way, goes way back. Publishers have been complaining about this since the 1700's. That's why it's call piracy. Because that was the model they had way back when. If it was new, we'd probably call it something else. The book pirates back then, by the way, were other publishers and Britain itself was a leading pirate of books. Just ask Germany.

Spooky Tuesday Part Four

Happy Halloween week, everyone! I can't believe the holiday is getting so close, I need to go buy more candy and put the finishing touches on the decorations. The weather is finally cooperating here, getting cool and crisp, with leaves drifting to the ground and cloudy, spooky evenings, perfect for little trick or treaters...

I thought, since we've looked at various haunts and ghosts this month, we'd wrap up with a little info about the Halloween traditions we still do today. For one--costumes! This is my favorite part of the holiday, since I love to dress up. (This is my Alice in Wonderland costume, which I wore to the Ghouls Gone Wild Halloween parade last weekend! You can't see it in this pic, but I have a great Alice headband I bought at the Disney Store). The practice of dressing up in costumes and going door to door asking for treats dates back to the Middle Ages (though not quite in the same form we use today!) and is part of the same tradition as Christmas wassailing. Then it was called "souling" and people would go from village house to village house on Hallowmas (November 1), asking for food in return for prayers for the dead on All Souls Day (November 2). This seems to have originated in Ireland and England, but there are details that show it was in practice as far south as Italy. In Two Gentlemen of Verona, Shakespeare has a line about "puling like a beggar at Hallowmas." Wearing costumes can be traced back to an ancient Celtic tradition of wearing masks and disguises to fool the spirits on this day, when the veil between the two worlds was thinnest.

"Souling" also involved using candle lanterns carved from turnips to commemorate the dead. Large turnips were hollowed out and carved with scary faces, then placed in windows to keep spirits away. (Pumpkins started being used in the New World, where they were widely available and larger, thus easier to carve than turnips!). I don't think Hello Kitty was a motif used back then, but I love this pic...







There always seem to be games at Halloween parties, like bobbing for apples. Traditional games seem to involve divination of some sort--a traditional Scottish practice said that to divine one's future spouse you should peel an apple in one long strip, then toss it over your shoulder. It will form the spouse's initials. (This seems pretty iffy to me!). Unmarried ladies were also told if they sat in a dark room and looked into a mirror on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. But if they were to die before they married, a skull would appear instead! (This seems to be a variation of the "Bloody Mary" game so beloved of slumber parties...). Thsi sort of thing seemed so popular in Victorian/Edwardian times that there was a wide range of postcards available for the holiday.


I have a couple of great books that tell more of the history and traditions of Halloween! If you'd like to read more, check out Nicholas Rogers's Halloween: From Pagan Ritual to Party Night and David J. Skal's Death Makes a Holiday: A Cultural History of Halloween.

If you happen to be in the UK for the holiday (as I wish I was!), Hampton Court is offering Ghost Tours, and the Tower is having rare after-dark Twilight Tours I will just be dressing up my dogs in their costumes and handing out candy to trick or treaters, but I guess I can pretend it's the Tower....

What are your plans for the holiday??? (And don't forget, I will be back here on Sunday, the 31st to talk about my November releases, a new "Undone" short story, To Court, Capture, and Conquer and "Snowbound and Seduced" in Regency Christmas Proposals. I'll be giving away copies, too--a sort of Halloween treat...)

Winner of The Gentleman Poet!

Forsooth, the winner of a signed copy of The Gentleman Poet by Kathryn Johnson is....

Elizabeth Kerri Mahon!!!

And, Elizabeth, since you have given us your email address, we'll pass it on to Kathryn without further ado.

Felicitations and Congratulations!!

Pirates!

Not only on the high seas, not only sailing under the skull and crossbones, pirates are still busy at their plundering. I'm talking about pirating of creative and intellectual property, accomplished in great numbers through this wonderful creation called the internet.

I love the internet. I love the access it gives me to a world of new friends. Furthermore, it enables me to tell the world about my books and my friends' books. But it also enables people to steal my books and the books of my friends.

Almost every day my Google Alerts pop up to inform me of another site where my books can be downloaded for free. In other words, offered without compensation to me or the publisher. Current laws make it the responsibility of the copyright holder to request that this infringement of copyright be taken down. Let me tell you, it is impossible to keep up with it.

I'm not trying to be political, but there is a bill pending to strengthen protection of copyright on the internet. I confess that I didn't wade through the difficult language of the bill, but I do think the comments are interesting. (Feel free to vote, too: for or against)
Washington Watch: The Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeits Act

I am in complete sympathy with those who cannot afford to buy books in today's difficult economy, but my solution would be to support and promote the use of libraries. And I never complain about used bookstores, because many readers buy used books to try out an author, then they are apt to buy the later books.

What do you all think about this issue? Do you know anyone who downloads pirated books?

See you Thursday at Diane's Blog
Blogging at DianeGaston.com

Interview with Kathryn Johnson and The Gentleman Poet

Today we welcome Kathryn Johnson whose historical, The Gentleman Poet: A Novel of Love, Danger, and Shakespeare's The Tempest, has received some spectacular reviews and kudos:


Set in the 1600s, this well-researched novel is sure to win praise from
historical-fiction readers, but it will also appeal to Shakespeare buffs, who
will enjoy the parallels to The Tempest. Pair The Gentlemen Poet with Robert
Nye’s The Late Mr. Shakespeare (1999) and Bruce Cook’s Young Will (2004), among the numerous novels that speculate on the life of the Bard.--Heather Paulson,
Booklist

Johnson imagines a backstory for Shakespeare's The Tempest in this entertaining tale of mystery, romance, and shipwreck. . . .Johnson may not be Shakespeare, but her tribute is nevertheless a well-crafted drama.--Publishers Weekly

“The Gentleman Poet is the best kind of historical novel—well researched, beautifully written and wildly entertaining.”--Daniel Stashower, author of The Beautiful Cigar Girl, and Edgar Award winning Teller of Tales

“Kathryn Johnson weaves a marvelously original story that combines history, adventure, and a young woman’s growth to produce a rich and atmospheric tale The Gentleman Poet took me to a time and place that were new to me, and gave me wonderful companions to share my journey!”--Mary Jo Putney, New York Times bestselling author of Never Less Than a Lady


Not only did I enjoy this book, I was extremely impressed. Kathryn's use of language was beautiful and completely evokative of the time period. Under her hands, this most unusual setting came sparkling to life.

Here's a sample:


A storm was coming. For weeks since our departure from Plymouthe, I had beenblessedly free of the seasickness that plagued others aboard our ship. Then one cloudless, azure-skied morning as the gentlest of zephyrs billowed our white sails, Demons took possession of my poor head and I began to fear the worst, for here in the middle of the vast Atlantic Ocean we were at the mercy of the elements.


Kathryn will be giving away one signed copy of The Gentleman Poet to one lucky, randomly-chosen commenter.

Give a big Risky welcome to Kathryn Johnson!

Tell us about The Gentleman Poet, Kathryn.
I think the full title tells a lot about it. The Gentleman Poet: A Novel of Love, Danger, and Shakespeare’s The Tempest. It’s a story based on a Shakespearean legend that poses the possibility of the Bard basing his famous play on an actual written account of a shipwreck off the coast of Bermuda in 1609. One of the passengers on a ship that was sailing from England to Jamestown, Virginia wrote an account of a hurricane that blew the Sea Venture onto a reef, destroying it. Luckily, the 150 passengers and crew survived and were less than a mile from what we now know as Bermuda. They struggled ashore and lived on the uninhabited island for 9 months while building a new ship to sail on to Jamestown. This is all remarkably true, and I used it as a basis for the novel. But in fiction we get to play with the facts, elaborate on them, create even more drama, tension, excitement. So I’ve posed the question: Since we can’t know for sure where William Shakespeare was during the time of this adventure (too little data), might it be possible that he didn’t simply read an account of the wreck? Might he have actually been aboard the ill-fated ship and part of this story?

Where did you come up with this idea?
It all began on my honeymoon in—you guessed it—Bermuda! We actually stood on the beautiful pink-sand beach where the Sea Venture’s survivors dragged themselves ashore. And we visited the replica of the Deliverance, the ship that the settlers built from the local cedar trees and wreckage of their old ship. That started my mind working on a possible plot. Plus I’d always wanted to write a book that somehow included Shakespeare. I think that part of it came to me whenever I remembered the movie, Shakespeare in Love, which I adored. I thought, they can make the Bard human and appealing in the movies, why can’t I do something like that in a book?

I can’t imagine how much research this took. Tell us about one of the favorite things you discovered in your research.
Oh, I love research. I can get lost in a good library. And because I live in the Washington, D.C. area I’m very fortunate to have the famous Folger Shakespeare Library nearby. This is where they have the largest collection of Shakespearean first folios, artifacts, manuscripts, and objects related to William Shakespeare and his times. It’s an amazing place. They even have an Elizabethan theater where you can see his plays produced. I’ve taken my granddaughter to several, and she loves them! The library’s reading room is where I discovered the account of the wreck that Shakespeare must have read. You can’t really doubt it when you compare the wording to his opening scene of his play, The Tempest, they are so similar. The account was actually a long letter or journal written by one of the men on board the ship, William Strachey. It was Strachey who actually gave me many of the plot points for my story.

We’re all about being risky in our writing. What is risky about The Gentleman Poet?
I tell my writing students and the authors I work with at Write by You, my writer’s mentoring business, “Sometimes you just have to take risks. Believe in yourself and your vision of your novel.” It’s hard, I know, and sometimes it doesn’t work out because you’re leaving the safety zone; you’re doing something different, something readers don’t expect. On the other hand, that’s how really innovative and interesting books get written.

The Gentleman Poet was a risky book to write because historical novels are, I believe, just beginning to enter a renaissance. Some savvy publishers realize this and they’re buying them enthusiastically; others are waiting to see what hits the bestseller lists before they take a chance.

Everything points to historical romances becoming even more popular than they were in previous years, and then there is the heavily researched fiction (like Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall) that’s so dependent upon fact that it approaches nonfiction. But readers are beginning to look for other creative ways of using history in novels—like the alternative histories, post-apocalyptic tales, and reimagining.

This last, reimagining, is what I’ve done with The Gentleman Poet. I’ve suggested it’s just possible that William Shakespeare might have done more than read Strachey’s account; he might have been on board the Sea Venture when it stranded its passengers on Bermuda. Reimagining is a wonderful way of using history and interweaving facts with fiction, creating an even more exciting and appealing adventure for readers. For instance, Elizabeth Persons, my heroine, was a real person. She was listed on the ship’s manifest as a servant. And Strachey mentioned in his account that Elizabeth married the ship’s cook while on the island. Now, we can’t be sure of anything else about Elizabeth—what she looked like or if she was deeply in love with her cook or what she wore. But we can imagine all sorts of possibilities and weave them into the story. The facts support a love story and a Survivor-style adventure complete with a murder and threats of mutiny.

I’m guessing that lots of people assume you are a debut author because this book is so different. Tell us about your other books and about Write by You.
Well, yes, this is the first novel of this type that I’ve written, so in a way it’s a debut for me, at least in regard to style. But over 40 of my novels have been published under various pennames: Kathryn Jensen, KM Kimball, Nicole Davidson. Some have been for adults, some for children. They’ve been romances, mysteries, thrillers, historical and sagas. It’s rather exciting to reinvent yourself every once in a while.

When I’m not writing my own books, I’m teaching. I developed a course for The Writer’s Center in Washington, D.C., called The Extreme Novelist. The goal for the students who enroll is to produce a complete rough draft of a novel in 8 weeks. They actually sign a contract with me pledging to write a minimum of 90 minutes, 6 days a week for the duration of the course! It’s called by some a “bootcamp” for novelists, and it produces amazing results. Some draft a full 300-page novel while others manage to get 200 pages or more drafted, which jumpstarts them so that they can then carry on and finish on their own in a few more weeks.

I’ve also carried over my teaching instincts to a mentoring business for writers. This is http://www.writebyyou.com/. In this way I can work one-on-one with writers who are living virtually anywhere in the world. My clients live in California, Texas, Maryland, Connecticut, Virginia, D.C., Tennessee, and many other states as well as in Canada. I offer guidance in many forms, from practical advice about creating a marketable manuscript to hands-on editing and full critiques. Many of my clients stay with me during the entire process of creating their novel—we brainstorm, work on techniques, polish and talk about things like how to find an agent. Our emails zip back and forth. I love working with new authors, but also help published authors who wish to try out a new genre or move up from a small press to a big-name publisher. We work on sharpening their game.

What’s next for you?
Another book, of course! LOL! But yes, I think it will be another historical novel involving reimagining and, if my editor agrees, it will focus on another beloved literary figure. I have a few favorites in mind, but wonder if your readers have any suggestions. What literary figures would you most like to read about in a novel? What historical periods most interest you?

Answer Kathryn's questions or ask her one of your own. Comment for a chance to win a signed copy of The Gentleman Poet.

No Excuses





Happy Friday, all!

This week--heck, this month--has been a tough one; apparently, my usually good health has decided to go on a bender, so I've been sick more often than not. Which means my writing has suffered, since my aching head makes me more likely to write literary fiction than romance, and nobody wants to see my characters moaning around on the page, least of all me.

BUT today I almost feel better. Almost, and I hope to write more on a project I blithely thought would be finished by three weeks ago. Ha! I will write later today, I vow.

Meanwhile, however, comes the news that Peter Jackson has begun casting The Hobbit, and has announced that Richard Armitage and Aidan Turner have been cast--as dwarves.

Let's take that in a moment, shall we?

On the one hand, being cast in such a high-profile film has got to have amazing results for the two actors, both of whom are talented, not to mention smokin' hot.

On the other hand, they're playing dwarves.

But a Tolkein fangirl assures me that Richard's role (I feel as though I can call him Richard by now) is a meaty one, not just a comic effect part. I didn't inquire about Aidan's part, I was too bowled over by the Armitage news in the first place.

I am certain Tolkein fans are frantically scrambling to figure out who the heck these two are (and Martin Freeman, who's been cast in the all-important role of Bilbo Baggins). I come at it from the other side, being a fan of the actors, not the series (sacrilege, I know; I love the LOTR movies, not the books so much). I bet Tolkein fans are dissecting the particulars with as much fervor as Austen fans when a new version of P&P was announced--'who is this Matthew MacFadyen character anyway?

(Freeman debuts over here this Sunday as Dr. Watson in the latest version of Sherlock Holmes. I've been told it's an amazing interpretation, so hopefully you have access to BBC America and can see it yourself. My DVR is already set to tape).

Where am I going with any of this? Nowhere! What else is new? But before you leave, a few questions:

What book do you hope will never be brought to the big or little screen because it can't possibly meet your expectations? What book do you hope would be made? What roles could you see Armitage, Turner or Freeman in next? Will it bum you out when the rest of the world discovers how delicious Armitage is?

Megan

Let the Games Begin with Sharon Lathan

Since I'm getting ready to travel to the NJ Romance Writers Conference today, I invited a buddy who does not quite so terrible things to Jane Austen, Sharon Lathan, to help out on today's blog. If you're in the NJ area, come and buy books at the Literacy Bookfair on Saturday, October 23.

Sharon is the author of the bestselling Mr. and Mrs. Fitzwilliam Darcy: Two Shall Become One, Loving Mr. Darcy: Journeys Beyond Pemberley, and My Dearest Mr. Darcy. In addition to her writing, she works as a Registered Nurse in a Neonatal ICU. She resides with her family in Hanford, California in the sunny San Joaquin Valley. For more information, please visit her website. Sharon also shares the spotlight at Austen Authors and Casablanca Authors. In the Arms of Mr. Darcy is her latest book, available now.



If only everyone could be as happy as they are…
Darcy and Elizabeth are as much in love as ever—even more so as their relationship matures. Their passion inspires everyone around them, and as winter turns to spring, romance blossoms around them.
Confirmed bachelor Richard Fitzwilliam sets his sights on a seemingly unattainable, beautiful widow; Georgiana Darcy learns to flirt outrageously; the very flighty Kitty Bennet develops her first crush, and Caroline Bingley meets her match.
But the path of true love never does run smooth, and Elizabeth and Darcy are kept busy navigating their friends and loved ones through the inevitable separations, misunderstandings, misgivings, and lovers’ quarrels to reach their own happily ever afters…
As I am writing my saga I am constantly asking myself this question: “What did people do _____?” I love nothing more than delving into what the day-to-day might have been like for people of the upper classes during the Regency. In my latest novel, In The Arms of Mr. Darcy, I asked the above question like this: “What did people do in the winter for entertainment?” Since the initial chapters cover Christmas and a large group of Darcy friends and family descending upon Pemberley for several weeks of Derbyshire winter in 1818, it was a valid question. As I learned of the possibilities it was necessary for Pemberley to have many rooms dedicated to entertaining including one I dubbed The Court. If you were part of the holiday party, here is the fun you would have enjoyed,

Inside amusements were plentiful. Parlor games, cards, musical concerts, darts, dominoes, backgammon, chess, and billiards are only some of the quieter pursuits possible. Tennis was strictly an indoor game until the lawn sport was invented in 1873. Primarily the sport of nobility and the gentry, tennis underwent numerous modifications since its initial creation in the twelfth century but one constant was that courts were constructed inside. The games now known as Squash and Racquets were 18th century creations, begun in debtors' prisons as a pastime for the inmates who did not have nets so would hit the balls against the solid stonewalls. This is also the genesis for handball since a racquet was not always available.

Badminton owes its name and rules to the Duke of Beaufort and Badminton House where it was popularized in 1870. However, for many centuries before similar games involving racquets and feather-stuffed corks were played as far away as India and in ancient Greece. In England it was a very popular street game for children called “battledore and shuttlecock” with the rule a simple one of keeping the shuttlecock aloft for as long as possible.

Shuffleboard – or shoveboard, shovelboard, shovillaborde – originated in England in the mind-1500s. It began as a game for royalty played with coins shoved across a polished tabletop, but peasants and common folk rapidly took it up in pubs across England. It became so popular with the masses that people stopped going to work, causing it to be banned! Henry VIII was an avid player of the game, an interesting fact since it was he who banned the game when it came to his attention that soldiers were playing shuffleboard rather than completing their training. Not surprisingly his ban was ineffective.

Ninepins (early bowling), hopscotch, quoits pin, miniature putting greens, and floor versions of shuffleboard are other potential games to play within a nice wooden floored room.

Depending on that Derbyshire weather, one could certainly brave the out-of-doors. The oldest pair of ice skates known to exist dates to 3000 BC and was made of sharpened bone with leather straps to tie to the shoes. The materials used varied over the centuries, but the style was essentially the same until 1848 when steel clamps were invented. Who first decided it was a terrific idea to slide over frozen ice is unknown, but obviously the concept was a popular one wherever water froze. The Dutch are credited with taking the sport to the next level with tournaments and carnivals hosted by the reigning monarchs as early as 1610.

Ice-skating related sports like curling and hockey existed although the rules and equipment have evolved since. The philosophy was naturally applied to sleds, the idea primarily to make smooth bottomed toboggans capable of bearing greater weight with more stability. Yes, it was a practical transportation device for peoples living in snowy places, but the delight in traveling very fast down an icy slope is as old as time.

So I think you can see that the inhabitants of Pemberley were never bored! And I didn’t even mention the Christmas fun and constant food! How about it then? Want to visit Pemberley for the holidays? If you do then I have two books for you! In the Arms of Mr. Darcy and A Darcy Christmas – both available now – cover Regency holiday traditions and wintertime fun.

Tell me about your favorite winter entertainments.

Revision Heck

I am in the middle of revisions so this will be a fairly short post. About, uh, Regency stuff. Like uh,




Handsome men!



Google books to the rescue.  I found this bit of dialogue to be very funny. Well done, Elizabeth Inchbald! (1815)


Sadly, searching Google Books for "handsome man" 1800-1820 was an exercise in disappointment, other than the above. Most of the references were misogynistic in the extreme. Alas.






So, who's handsome?

Spooky Tuesday Part Three!

I can't believe it's almost the end of October! It's flown past and soon it will be time to think about Thanksgiving and (gasp!) Christmas. But there is still plenty of time left for more spookiness....

Last Tuesday we looked at some famous ghosts of the UK (Anne Boleyn, Mary Queen of Scots, etc)--today we'll look at some interesting apparitions, not necessarily ghosts (whatever we think a "ghost" is) but stuff that is pretty creepy anyway. In many parts of the world, there are lots of legends of spirits and "phantom lights" wandering roadways, hitchhiking or just generally floating around being creepy. (When I was a teenager, I remember tales of a certain spot outside town where ghost lights could be seen, and the spirit of a girl who was run over on a railroad track and pushes cars over the fatal spot. But I was never brave enough to go look for myself...) There are also ghost cars and phantom carriages pulled by ghoulish horses and headless coachmen. The streets can be dangerous places.

There are also lots of haunted World War II airfields in England, places where scores of young men flew off to their doom and now keep coming back to their airstrips. One legend combines the haunted airstrip with the roadway ghost. At the remains of RAF Metheringham, a young woman is spotted standing by the road just outside the gates between 9 and 10 at night. She wears a pale green coat and gray scarf with an RAF wings badge pinned to her collar. She stops passers-by and asks for help, telling them her boyfriend had a motorcycle accident and is injured nearby. She looks quite real--until she suddenly vanishes, and leaves a feeling of fear and panic behind, along with an unpleasant smell. (Legend has it she was killed when riding the motorcycle with her fiance).

Biggin Hill airfield is perhaps the most famous of the "haunted airfields"--phantom Spitfires fly overhead, heard but not seen, and sometimes airmen dressed in trench coats walk through the village before disappearing. Another similar spot is Bircham Newton, where doomed airmen are said to play squash in deserted buildings.

One famous manifestation of the "phantom carriage" is Lady Howard, a 17th century noblewoman who was widowed 4 times and also lost her young son. Strangely, in life she had a good reputation, despite a horrible father who was detested in the local village (and killed himself) and one abusive husband who (shockers!) divorced her, but her other 3 marriages were content enough and she was charitable and well-liked. Now in death she is cursed to ride each night in a carriage made of the bones of her 4 husbands and accompanied by a huge black dog with blood-red eyes and driven by a headless coachman. The ghostly-white figure of a lady can be glimpsed inside. It leaves behind a foul smell, and it's said that if it stops at any door or for anyone on the road, that person will die.

"And horses two and four;
My ladye hath a black blood-hound
That runneth on before.
My ladye's coach hath nodding plumes,
The driver hath no head;
My ladye is an ashen white,
As one that is long dead."


Black demon dogs are another favorite legendary haunt. They're called different names--the Barghest and Gytrash of Yorkshire, Black Shuck of East Anglia, and Bogey Beast of Lancashire. They're often associated with lightning storms, crossroads, places of execution, and isolated pathways. They're often a harbinger of doom for those who see them (of course--what else would giant black dogs with blood-red eyes be doing??? Very Hound of the Baskervilles)

Another harbiner of doom is an apparition called a "Radiant Boy"--a child often wearing white, very blond and pretty. But beware looking in his eyes! (It's speculated that these are a legacy of early Nordic settlers in the 9th and 10th centuries in Cumberland and Northumberland, since they are also common in Scandinavia). One "radiant boy" incident took place in 1803, when a rector and his wife visited the noble Howard family at Corby Castle in Cumberland (maybe best to avoid those Howards?). After dinner they retired to their guest chamber where they were woken up very late by a glimmer next to the bed that increased in light until it was overwhelming. A boy wearing white formed in the light, and looked in the rector's eyes until he turned and disappeared. The couple ran out early the next morning, but the rector later gave a statement about what they saw to the Howards. (There is also a legend of Castlereagh seeing a radiant boy in Ireland, years before his tragic death...)

One last weird case, completely different from black dogs and haunted airfields, is the Phantom Drummer of Tedworth, a famous case of poltergeist in the 1660s in Wiltshire. A man named William Drury was annoying people with banging on a drum all the time (sounds like a neighbor in my old apartment!), and John Mompesson filed a complaint. Drury was released but his drum confiscated and given to Mompesson for safekeeping. The drum started making continual noises all on its own, sometimes accompanied by stuff like objects hurled across the room, terrible smells, disembodied voices, chamber pots overturned (yuck!), doors opening and slamming shut, children pinched, etc. Classic poltergeist activity. A minister came to investigate and saw some of the occurrences for himself. He thought an evil spirit must be responsible, but here is the twist--it turned out to be a living person (or so the legend goes).

Drury had meanwhile been arrested again for theft and was in Gloucester Gaol. He claimed he caused the activity because he wanted his drum back. He was tried for witchcraft, but amazingly got off easy--he was just told to leave the county. The activity stopped.



These are just a very, very few of the fascinating, creepy stuff I've found when researching these posts! I think I need to sleep with the lights on now. What are some of your favorite old legends and stories? And next week I'll be looking at the history behind popular Halloween activities. What do you like to do on the holiday? (Obviously I like to dress up, but I also have the unfortunate driving desire to eat lots and lots of mini Snickers bars. I like the Halloween parade, but avoid haunted houses...)

History In All The Right Places

It wasn't so long ago that the buzz around publishing was that Historicals were "dead." I never believed it, because I always thought there were plenty of readers like me who loved Historicals. It turns out, if I remember the statistics correctly, that sales of Historical Romance went down in the same proportion that all book sales went down.

Lately it occurred to me that not only are Historicals not dead, they have sprung to life in lots of different ways!

1. Reinventing and expanding on Jane Austen's work.

Just think of how many books have expanded on Jane Austen's work, particularly Pride & Prejudice! Our guest yesterday, Abigail Reynolds with her latest Mr. Darcy's Obsession, is a prime example! But there are a bunch more. See here.

2. Using Jane Austen as a character herself.

Stephanie Barron's Jane Austen Mysteries come to mind. As well as Becoming Jane Austen. But number one in my mind is our own Janet's so very clever Jane and the Damned.


3. Using real historical events in books about fictional people.

Amanda and I do this a lot! Amanda's The Winter Queen takes place in the court of Queen Elizabeth I and the Frost Fair of 1564. Her Laurel McKee books take place in during the tumultuous time of the 1800 Union Acts in Ireland. And, of course, my Three Soldiers Series uses the real historical events of the Napoleonic War.


4. Then there are the Historicals that are fictionalized stories of real historical figures or events.

Philippa Gregory, of course, is perhaps the queen of this sort of book and her upcoming book, The Red Queen, set during The War of the Roses is just the latest example. Carolly Erickson is another author of this sort of book. Next Sunday, I'm excited to say our guest will be Kathryn Johnson whose historical The Gentleman Poet, is based on a piece of history that tells a story of love and danger, including, perhaps, the events behind Shakespeare's The Tempest. (It is a spectacular book, so don't forget to stop by. You might even win a signed copy!)

What are some of the books of each of these types that you've read and enjoyed? What do you like about each of these different kinds of books? Have you heard any buzz about The Gentleman Poet?

Abigail Reynolds winner

LisaS, you have won a copy of Mr. Darcy's Obsession.
Congratulations!
Since you included your email in your post, look out for an email from us.

Mr. Darcy's Obsession

Today we welcome guest Abigail Reynolds, who's here to talk about her latest in The Pemberley Variations, Mr. Darcy's Obsession and give away a signed copy.

What if Mr. Darcy never had the opportunity to propose to Elizabeth Bennet at Hunsford, and did not meet her again until her circumstances were reduced? In Mr. Darcy's Obsession, Mr. Darcy has an even greater social distance to bridge if he wishes to marry Elizabeth. Add in some Fitzwilliam relations with links to the Prince Regent and the loose morals typical of Regency high society who feel that Elizabeth is the material of which mistresses, not wives, are made, and Mr. Darcy has to make a painful choice between the demands of a decadent society and his personal moral sense. The background of this novel is the morally bankrupt ton which Jane Austen knew well, but did not describe in detail in her novels, perhaps because it was a given to her and her contemporaneous readers. Against this backdrop, the characters of Mr. Darcy and Miss Bennet shine brightly as they seek to find an alternative to the bounds of decorum that constrain Darcy's usual marital prospects.

Readers who can't get enough of Darcy and Elizabeth will find that Reynolds does an admirable job of capturing the feel of the period in this entertaining diversion. – Booklist

Mr. Darcy's Obsession is an adventurous variation that explores a different route with our beloved Pride and Prejudice. In my opinion, it is one of Ms. Reynolds's more exciting novels complete with a street urchin spy, libertine uncle, eccentric aunt, many damsels in distress, and an honorable and praiseworthy hero! I most emphatically recommend! – Austenesque Reviews

For those that have been chomping at the bit for another Reynolds’ novel, Mr. Darcy’s Obsession does not disappoint! And to Darcy & Elizabeth lovers who have yet to discover her works, you must put this at the front of the queue! - Austenprose


Abigail, that's a gorgeous cover. Congratulations on the new release and welcome to the Riskies. Tell us your publishing story. I believe you started off self-published?

Yes, I took a very odd route to publication. My first books were posted for free on the internet in serial form. I couldn’t see Austen variations ever being published. I made an brief effort to secure an agent for my modern Austen-related novel, The Man Who Loved Pride & Prejudice, but that left me with a collection of rejection letters from agents who said they liked it, but that there was no market for Austen-related fiction. That was in 2003, and I don’t think I’d hear that today! Then some of my on-line readers said they’d like to get my stories in book form, so I self-published them, not expecting to sell more than a dozen, since who would buy a book that was available for free on the internet? Quite a few people, apparently. I sold several thousand, and was noticed by Deb Werksman at Sourcebooks, who made me a book offer.

What is it about P&P specifically and Darcy and Elizabeth's relationship that lends itself to such wonderful creative riffs?

P&P is a writer’s dream because Darcy and Elizabeth are such strong characters, yet Jane Austen leaves a great deal about them unsaid. We actually know very little about them or their history. That’s part of why so many people can identify with them, and also why writers can’t resist the chance to fill in some of those blanks. They’re such passionate characters that it’s easy for modern readers to relate to them, and they’re both simultaneously very admirable yet flawed in ways that aren’t threatening to us. The spirit of P&P is so bright and sparkly that readers long to return to its world.

Do you feel intimidated by "borrowing" Austen's characters? She is a pretty tough act to follow!

She’s definitely a tough act to follow, but actually, I don’t feel intimidated because there’s no comparison. I know I’ll never be able to write them anywhere near as well as she did. It’s like if I were learning to play cello, I wouldn’t find Yo-Yo Ma intimidating, because he’s so far beyond what I could hope to achieve.

Do Austen purists approve? Can you tell us what sort of reactions you've had from readers?

Many Austen lovers are open-minded and willing to give anything a try, and others disapprove heartily. Oddly, though, many of the ones who swear they’d never read an Austenesque novel seem to know surprisingly well what happens in my books! Part of the problem with purists is that people read P&P so differently. Some people think it portrays a simpler, more innocent, more moral time. Others see the incisive wit and the implied criticism of society, and realize the Regency was an era of moral decadence. I’ve had astonishing conversations with people who insist that Darcy was a virgin when he met Elizabeth, which to my mind is about as likely as him being born in China. He would be such an incredible oddball for the time if he were. I’ve had an easier time with the purists lately, though, because my books seem positively mainstream to them compared to Pride & Prejudice & Zombies or Mr. Darcy, Vampyre!

Reader reactions are all over the map. Apparently Mr. Darcy’s Obsession is either my best book because it doesn’t include intimate scenes, or it’s a complete letdown for the very same reason! Some readers are so happy to have anything more of Lizzy and Darcy that I could write whatever I like, and others can’t stand having their images shattered.

What sort of research do you do and which books about Austen would you recommend?

I do a lot of online research since there’s a lot of excellent material about the time period available there. I tend to get caught up in researching odd historical details, most of which never make it into my books, but I need to know the details, like what kind of pommel a regency sidesaddle would have, to picture the scene accurately in my head. As for books about Austen, the most important thing to read is her letters. You see new sides of her in them and get a real feel for her thought process. I’d also recomment Emily Auerbach’s Searching for Jane Austen, a very readable and insightful analysis of Austen’s character and the development of the myth of “dear old Aunt Jane.”

Is there another Austen that inspires you to dream of sequels?

I’ve written a modern version of Persuasion, but publishers are much less interested in anything that’s not P&P. Sense & Sensibility also tempts me.

What's next for you?

I’m working on another Pride & Prejudice variation, and sequels to both Mr. Darcy’s Obsession and The Man Who Loved Pride & Prejudice.

Thanks for inviting me! It’s been a pleasure to visit with you.

Let's chat! Abigail will drop by to respond to questions and comments and we'll be giving away a signed copy of her book.

Pinchbeck and Paste


I’m a magpie. I’m drawn to shiny, sparkly things and always have been. I love glitter, sequins, chandeliers, beaded bookmarks and of course, jewelry. It doesn’t have to be expensive. In fact, after I lost one of a pair of opal (luckily, not antique) earrings at a hotel, I decided I prefer to own jewelry I won’t feel terribly guilty about losing. I’m most attracted to jewelry that is unusual, vintage or artsy. I’ve even dabbled in jewelry making; though my results are not professional, it’s fun.

I love when I have to research jewelry for a story. One of my favorite sources is Three Graces Antique Jewelry, a good place for research and fantasy shopping. Most of the images in this post are from Three Graces. I based a ring in one of my books on this one, substituting sapphires for the rubies.

I’ve also learned that for the heroine on a budget like me, there were options that were less expensive than gold and gemstones.

I remember seeing the term “pinchbeck” in Georgette Heyer novel and wondered what it meant. It turns out it’s an alloy of copper and zinc invented by Christopher Pinchbeck (1670-1732) and used extensively to make durable jewelry that was less expensive than gold. The earrings to the left are gold, to the right, pinchbeck, both early 19th century. I think both are very pretty! One could wear these to a ball, with a pretty white gown if one were young, or with more vibrant colors if older (I love gold with green).








The term “paste” used to make me think of plastic (ugh!) but it actually refers to cut leaded glass faceted to resemble real gemstones. Being softer, it was trickier to cut. And some of it is very pretty as well. Here I have several sets of earrings, diamonds above, paste below. Frankly, I cannot tell the difference! Any of them would be just the thing for a night with my lover at the opera.



















The term “parure” refers to a set of matching jewelry. The first is amethyst, the other is emerald-colored paste. I think these parures would be great for a presentation at court. Since the combination of high waists and hoop skirts couldn't flatter any figure, pretty trinkets like this would help to bring the eye toward the face, instead.















Here are some more period baubles. Can you guess what period they are and can you tell the paste and pinchbeck from the real? (Don't worry if you can't--I was very surprised by some of them.) Where would you wear them?

Elena



























 
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